Tony Buck, Otomo Yoshihide, Michael Sheridan, Kato Hideki, The Necks, Japanoise, Experimental, Noise, Rock, Industrial, Improv; CD (Used)
Peril (1992-1996) was a Japanese/Australian underground industrial band, founded by drummer Tony Buck (The Necks) during his stay in Japan. The music of the collective was mostly improvised, with Buck's drum-triggered sampled rhythmic base complimented by the turntable & guitar from Japanese experimental turntablist Otomo Yoshihide with rock/improv elements from Michael Sheridan (Dumb and the Ugly) (guitar) and Kato Hideki (Ground Zero)(bass). The group recorded and performed internationally throughout Europe and Asia.
Sonic Youth, Gumball, Voidoids, Thurston Moore, Steve Shelley, Lee Ranaldo; CD (1991) Used
Dim Stars was an alternative rock supergroup active briefly in the early 1990s. The group was composed of bassist Richard Hell of Richard Hell and the Voidoids, guitarist Thurston Moore and drummer Steve Shelley from Sonic Youth, guitarist Don Fleming from Gumball; there was some guitar work by Robert Quine, also of the Voidoids. They released this debut EP CD in 1991
Japan, Psychedelic, Noise, Experimental, Progressive, Yamamoto Seiichi, Boredoms; CD 1996 (Used)
OMOIDE HATOBA got started as the solo project of Seiichi YAMAMOTO (guitars, ex-BOREDOMS) in 1987. He developed this project by recruiting Atsushi TSUYAMA (bass) and Chu HASEGAWA (drums), and released the debut EP 'Surfin' U.F.O.' in 1990. In the same year they released the debut album 'Dai-ongaku' via the oldest Japanese independent label Alchemy Records. Their eccentrically vintage psychedelic and avantgarde progressive style has been much approved and celebrated by lots of fans and reviewers. Since the release of the fifth album 'Kinsei' (1995) OMOIDE HATOBA have been the unsettled project around two bombastic players Seiichi and Atsushi - the dignified originality of OMOIDE HATOBA can be built up under battles of play by them.
OOIOO, Boredoms, Japanese, Yoshimi P-we, Tribal, Experimental, Psychedelic, Rock, Thrill Jockey; CD (2006) Used
These are four dexterous, imaginative musicians playing difficult music. And, if Yoshimi P-We's vocals aren't a giveaway, the colorful and percussive nature of almost everything here should be: This is an album from the same school of Japanese polyglots that gave us Boredoms. Taiga is OOIOO's broadest, busiest, and furthest reaching album to date.
Avant Garde, Avant Rock, Noise Rock, Mick Barr; CD (Used)
Another tasty (2002) offering from mental patient avant/noise rockers ORTHRELM....15 tracks, you know what to expect!
Psychic TV, Throbbing Gristle, Genesis P-Orrige, Experimental, Industrial, Avant Garde, Rare; CD (1994) Used
Subtitle: "Thee Transmutation Ov Mercury"
For thee realisation ov this final gift ov devotion to ALAURA, PSYCHIC TV were Genesis P-Orridge and Craig Ellenwood. It is a completely new piece ov TRANSMEDIA music. Words an offering to Alaura and transmitted as an aural coumfirmation ov absolute devotion and surrender to thee deepest loves. These are steps 1 - 12 in a 13 Step Programme.
Lee Ranaldo, Sonic Youth, Indie Rock, Remixed, Rare; CD (Used)
Paradise Motel featuring Lee Ranaldo (Sonic Youth), remixed by Lee Ranaldo - Rare 3 track CD on INFECTIOUS RECORDS (1999)
Experimental, SST, Avant Garde, Cut n paste, Sampling, Notorious; CD (Used)
Helter Stupid is Negativeland's fifth studio album, released in 1989. It was Negativland's third concept album, focusing on the hoax that band member Richard Lyons started, which claimed that the Negativland song "Christianity Is Stupid" inspired David Brom to murder his family with an axe.
Experimental, Electronic, Drum and Bass, Electronica, Ninja Tune; CD (2015) Used
Spacek’s ability to breeze over hectic beats is evident from opener "I Wanna Know", a snare drum skitter right out of an old jungle track sliding beneath him, while on "Tonight", he whispers sweet nothings about being VIP over a flipped Afrobeat sample. At moments like this, Spacek’s penchant for twisting beats feels like child’s play, most evidently on the halting claps and bleeps of "Gotta Get Some Music", where he and his kids titter about that very phrase. And amid the shortwave squeals of "Back to School" are strange background vocals that might make you wonder if Spacek has been listening to early Prince or else early Ariel Pink.